Ethos Statement on Fundamentalism & Evangelicalism
Republished with permission (and unedited) from Central Baptist Theological Seminary. (The document posted at Central’s website within the last couple of weeks.)
Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism
To be an evangelical is to be centered upon the gospel. To be a Fundamentalist is, first, to believe that fundamental doctrines are definitive for Christian fellowship, second, to refuse Christian fellowship with all who deny fundamental doctrines (e.g., doctrines that are essential to the gospel), and third, to reject the leadership of Christians who form bonds of cooperation and fellowship with those who deny essential doctrines. We are both evangelicals and Fundamentalists according to these definitions. We all believe that, as ecclesial movements, both evangelicalism and Fundamentalism have drifted badly from their core commitments. In the case of evangelicalism, the drift began when self-identified neo-evangelicals began to extend Christian fellowship to those who clearly rejected fundamental doctrines. This extension of fellowship represented a dethroning of the gospel as the boundary of Christian fellowship. It was a grievous error, and it has led to the rapid erosion of evangelical theology within the evangelical movement. At the present moment, some versions of professing evangelicalism actually harbor denials of the gospel such as Open Theism or the New Perspective on Paul. We deny that the advocates of such positions can rightly be called evangelical.
On the other hand, we also believe that some Fundamentalists have attempted to add requirements to the canons of Christian fellowship. Sometimes these requirements have involved institutional or personal loyalties, resulting in abusive patterns of leadership. Other times they have involved organizational agendas. They have sometimes involved the elevation of relatively minor doctrines to a position of major importance. In some instances, they have involved the creation of doctrines nowhere taught in Scripture, such as the doctrine that salvation could not be secured until Jesus presented His material blood in the heavenly tabernacle. During recent years, the most notorious manifestation of this aberrant version of Fundamentalism is embodied in a movement that insists that only the King James version of the Bible (or, in some cases, its underlying Greek or Hebrew texts) ought be recognized as the perfectly preserved Word of God.
We regard both of these extremes as equally dangerous. The evangelicalism of the far Left removes the gospel as the boundary of Christian fellowship. The Fundamentalism of the far Right adds to the gospel as the boundary of Christian fellowship. Neither extreme is acceptable to us, but because we encounter the far Right more frequently, and because it claims the name of Fundamentalism, we regard it as a more immediate and insidious threat.
Another version of Fundamentalism that we repudiate is revivalistic and decisionistic. It typically rejects expository preaching in favor of manipulative exhortation. It bases spirituality upon crisis decisions rather than steady, incremental growth in grace. By design, its worship is shallow or non-existent. Its philosophy of leadership is highly authoritarian and its theology is vitriolic in its opposition to Calvinism. While this version of Fundamentalism has always been a significant aspect of the movement, we nevertheless see it as a threat to biblical Christianity.
We also reject the “new-image Fundamentalism” that absorbs the current culture, producing a worldly worship and a pragmatic ministry. These self-professed fundamentalists often follow the latest trends in ministry, disparage theological labels such as Baptist, and aggressively criticize any version of Fundamentalism not following their ministry style.
We oppose anti-separatist evangelicalism, hyper-fundamentalism, revivalism, and new-image Fundamentalism. We wish to reclaim authentic Fundamentalism, to rebuild it, and to strengthen it. For us that reclamation involves not only working against the philosophy of broad evangelicalism (which assaults us from outside), but also working against those versions of Fundamentalism that subvert the Christian faith.
On the other hand, these positions do not exhaust the evangelical options. Conservative evangelicals have reacted against the current erosion of evangelicalism by refocusing attention upon the gospel, including its importance as a boundary for Christian fellowship. These conservative evangelicals have become important spokespersons against current denials of the gospel, and they have also spoken out against trends that remove the gospel from its place of power in transforming lives (e.g., the church growth and church marketing movements).
Certain differences do still exist between historic Fundamentalists and conservative evangelicals. Fundamentalists, in contrast to Conservative evangelicals, tend to align more with dispensationalism and cessationism. Fundamentalists tend to react against contemporary popular culture, while many conservative evangelicals embrace it. Perhaps most importantly, Fundamentalists make a clean break with the leadership of anti-separatist evangelicals, while conservative evangelicals continue to accommodate (or at least refuse to challenge) their leadership.
Because of these differences, we do not believe that complete cooperation with conservative evangelicalism is desirable. Nevertheless, we find that we have much more in common with conservative evangelicals (who are slightly to our Left) than we do with hyper-Fundamentalists (who are considerably to our Right), or even with revivalistic Fundamentalists (who are often in our back yard). In conservative evangelicals we find allies who are willing to challenge not only the compromise of the gospel on the Left, but also the pragmatic approach to Christianity that typifies so many evangelicals and Fundamentalists. For this reason, we believe that careful, limited forms of fellowship are possible.
We wish to be used to restate, refine, and strengthen biblical Fundamentalism. The process of restatement includes not only defining what a thing is, but also saying what it is not. We find that we must point to many versions of professing Fundamentalism and say, “That is not biblical Christianity.” We do not believe that the process of refinement and definition can occur without such denials. The only way to strengthen Fundamentalism is to speak out against some self-identified Fundamentalists.
We also see a need to speak out against the abandonment of the gospel by the evangelical Left, the reducing of the gospel’s importance by the heirs of the New Evangelicalism, and the huckstering of the gospel by pragmatists, whether evangelicals or Fundamentalists. On the other hand, while we may express disagreement with aspects of conservative evangelicalism (just as we may express disagreement with one another), we wish to affirm and to strengthen the activity of conservative evangelicals in restoring the gospel to its rightful place.
The marks of a strong Fundamentalism will include the following:
- A recommitment to the primacy and proclamation of the gospel.
- An understanding that the fundamentals of the gospel are the boundary of Christian fellowship.
- A focus on the importance of preaching as biblical exposition.
- An emphasis upon progressive sanctification understood as incremental spiritual growth.
- An elevation of the importance of ordinate Christian affections, expressed partly by sober worship that is concerned with the exaltation and magnification of God.
- An understanding of Christian leadership primarily as teaching and serving.
- A commitment to teaching and transmitting the whole system of faith and practice.
- An exaltation of the centrality of the local congregation in God’s work.
These are features of an authentic Fundamentalism that we all feel is worth saving. These features describe the kind of Fundamentalism that we wish to build. Their absence in either Fundamentalism or other branches of evangelicalism constitutes a debasing of Christianity that we intend to oppose.
- 70 views
[Don Johnson] Hi SusanYup, it does.
I have been thinking about this lately. What else could it mean? We aren’t in denominations anymore (most fundamentalists anyway), there are no disciplinary structures. So what is separation for us? Voting with our feet. We don’t support works where we disagree on significant points. That’s also why separation isn’t monolithic in application, we may believe the same principles but not apply them evenly or consistently.
But basically, it is at the points where we might intersect, or cooperate, that separation will occur if it must. Most of our lives and ministries are run entirely separate from one another anyway - even two likeminded churches in the same town don’t have that much cooperation happening between them. Day to day they are separate independent entities. But when they have a conference, youth rally, guest speaker… then they might intersect. And then they have to decide if they will or not.
Does that make sense?
So am I inconsistent, then, if I read and recommend Piper books even though I disagree with what he says or with decisions that he’s made about who to put on his speaking platform? Some people would say no…I should avoid him entirely. If you say “Yes”, then welcome to the Young Fundys club.
Again, there’s the rub :).
"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells
Don’t support their conferences, don’t invite them to your meetings, don’t buy their books, don’t use their materials, don’t support them as missionaries, don’t promote their schools…It would seem, then, that would ultimately lead to a comprehensive series of meetings, an over-encompassing publishing house to produce books and materials, and a structure to commission or approve schools.
I wonder if anyone has ever tried that? :-)
Greg Linscott
Marshall, MN
[Greg Linscott]Don’t support their conferences, don’t invite them to your meetings, don’t buy their books, don’t use their materials, don’t support them as missionaries, don’t promote their schools…It would seem, then, that would ultimately lead to a comprehensive series of meetings, an over-encompassing publishing house to produce books and materials, and a structure to commission or approve schools.
I wonder if anyone has ever tried that? :-)
[Susan R] I think some of the problem is where folks draw the lines of what is and isn’t subversive enough to be damaging.The reality of it is that separation is something that is difficult to define without specifics, because every situation has different particulars that make the best way to handle it unique to that situation. Even though it has become almost a cliche, I can understand and even support the ‘together for the gospel’ idea in spite of how militant and dogmatic and separatist-ic I am about my own sincerely held beliefs- which, btw, would probably place me well within the Red Zone on the IFB Chart-O-Rama.
[Susan R] It does make sense, thanks for explaining that some more. I was wondering in particular about buying books, because IMO buying and reading books doesn’t constitute ‘support’ necessarily- but recommending them would- that would be where I drew that line.Yes, I guess I did say ‘buying books’, didn’t I. Well, I suppose I have bought some books of people I disagree with and wouldn’t support or cooperate with in some way. MacArthur and Dever, for example. I have had reasons to buy some Piper and Mahaney, but I only buy them used… that way no royalties go to them or their organizations.
But I wasn’t really thinking of them when I was doing my riff that included “don’t buy their books”. I was thinking about the extremists on the right as I recall the context of the conversation at that point. So… In order to make my break with them I would make it at the points in which our ministries might intersect. That would mean I might refuse to attend or support conferences where they were involved, refuse to support their ministries by purchasing material from them, including books, consider whether to support missionaries/mission boards connected to them, etc.
It should be noted that these are examples, different circumstances may call for different measures. In a loose fellowship dominated by independents, as fundamentalism is, how else can we really distance ourselves from those whose ministry we consider to be unacceptable?
Maranatha!
Don Johnson
Jer 33.3
In a loose fellowship dominated by independents, as fundamentalism is, how else can we really distance ourselves from those whose ministry we consider to be unacceptable?That strikes me as a tad ironic coming from a member in good standing of the BJU Alumni Association… :D
Greg Linscott
Marshall, MN
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Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
My comment wasn’t directed to you. It was in general about the recent conference. I know it might seem like I am on a mission with this, but I really am not. I just think it was wrong and hypocritical.
Roger Carlson, PastorBerean Baptist Church
This will be a quick and matter-of-fact answer to your question. I take all 7 editions of the KJV as being preserved copies of God’s Inspired Word - even though there are thousands of differences between the variants - that is just between the different “editions” of the KJV. That would include the first edition that included the Catholic Church Apocrapha - of course I don’t believe the Apocrapha has authority. That would include the second printing they called the “Wicked Bible” - “Thou shalt commit adultry” (oops). That would include the edition of the KJV the Mormon church uses today. That would include the 4th or 5th edition that survives today in several forms - Oxford, Old Scofield, New Scofield, Camb., etc…….It doesn’t bother me at all that we have thousands of variants between the thousands of mansc of Greek, Hebrew, and “scads” of other translations such as coptic, Latin, Syriac, etc…..I’ve studied over the years various variants in scores of books from both testiments and they amount to nothing by way of doctrine, the gospel or even the minor details of where Scripture impacts history, science, archeology, anthropology and such. About the only “real” discussion of interest might be questions like, “OK - was he leaning on his bed or his staff?” I have no doubt that each mansc and each transl I hold in my hand have copying errors because of man’s imperfections - Yet on the other hand, at a near miraculous level, we have close to 97% agreement amongst the mans and trans. All serious copies of God’s Word have a level of preserved authority that traces it’s source back to the inspired, God-breathed written revelation that is “The Word.” So….when I stand up in the pulpit of SVBC and preach from the NKJV or the NIV or the NASB or the ESV or when I try once in a blue moon to come up with my own translation from the Greek or Hebrew text….I am confident that I carry the same authority that was given by God to the original recepients of the text. It is just as authoritative today as it was then…..even with a copier error or two in a specific chapter. My position has been “the position” of orthodox believers for 2 mill. This idea that you have to have one perfect trans per each lang is new and outside the strain of the Scriptures teaching about itself. I mean all you have to do is note that the LXX quotes of the OT in the NT are often a little different than the OT Hebrew quotes of those same passages. Are you going to band Jesus because he violated OT Scriptures by quoting from a less than accurate LXX? I hope not! BTW - I have no doubt that after the original giving of an epistle, there was no doubt copying errors within the first few “copies” of the original. That in no way, shape or form undermines it’s source or authority.
I don’t think I’ve said anything here that different than what the other guys have said. But you asked me - so there you go. Smarter guys can help you more out there.
Hey Pittman brother dude - the name is just “Joel.” No one seriously calls me “Dr. Tetreau.” I mean I have 1 - but my Dad has 2 - so everyone calls him Dr. Tetreau. I’m just Joel.
Later bro!
Straight Ahead!
jt
Dr. Joel Tetreau serves as Senior Pastor, Southeast Valley Bible Church (sevbc.org); Regional Coordinator for IBL West (iblministry.com), Board Member & friend for several different ministries;
Thanks for taking the time for your lengthy response. Now I find I must respond to your response, but lengthy quotes in quotes in quotes will just get confusing, so, text only.
You defined a process by which God has “certified” the KJV to mankind as His chosen preserved Bible for today. I raised questions about this process, asking you to define how it worked. That does not make me a rationalist. Over and over you return to the accusation that I am using a rationalistic model, and that you cannot go where I go in this discussion. But my questions do not mean I am a rationalist. They mean that if the process God used works the way you claim it works, it should be explainable. Humans would have to be able to perceive that it is true for the “certification” to work. If God gives a sign, it must be recognizable as a sign distinct from the background events of history, or it won’t signify anything.
I am not a rationalist, but I’m hardly a mystic either. I see reason in Scripture. Thus I have learned to expect reasoned behavior from our God.
My apologies if you took offense at the “Roman-Catholic sounding” crack. I did not intend to produce guilt by association. Rather, I was interjecting what I consider an important point, without fully developing it. One of our problems is that the Roman Catholic church sets the authority of “mother church” up as a final arbiter, regardless of what God has clearly defined. This is something we firmly reject. Your process does something similar: the weight of church history now defines something that the Bible does not. NO PASSAGE indicates that any translation will receive special attention as a preserved text over and above all others, relegating all others to the scrap heap. In fact, the juxtaposition of such passages as II Tim. 3:16-17 with verse 15 would lead us to believe quite the opposite: that any responsibly handled copy or translation can rightly be called Scripture. Now you say that a historical oddity (the fact that many English-speaking Bible believers accepted the King James Version for 400 years) equals the voice of God about that issue. You might as well say that the weight of believers in recent decades saying the rapture was to be soon made it certain.
You indicate that you would rather trust the Holy Spirit leading the believing church than to trust a group of academics. But I’m not certain that the Holy Spirit leading was the primary driving force in the preference of the KJV over so many years. For many years, it was the only credible English translation other than reaching further back into English Translation history. The first few English translations that made themselves available with broad marketing were fatally flawed; witness the RSV’s handling of Isaiah 7:14, that brought sweeping rejection to what was otherwise a high-quality translation. It could not survive that translation choice given the current warfare between liberalism and conservatism in theology. Most believers trusted the KJV because it was the only one on the shelf that had any credibility in their churches. This is not an invalid choice, but it’s hardly the same as if there were 4 translations and every believer had felt drawn to the KJV.
In answer to my comments that the evolution of the English language drives us toward a new English translation, and that, given your belief system, it would eventually drive the Lord toward one as well, you say we could educate the 90% that cannot read the KJV well. I agree. My reaction, after reading Ryken’s newest work on English Translation, was that people with such strong affinity for the KJV as he demonstrates had better be prepared to open Sunday Schools in the classic sense – one where reading is taught. You KJVO guys had better get started. If your public schools are like the ones here, the people you are trying to reach can barely read modern English, much less the KJV.
But when you question my hypothesis that God would want the Bible in the language of the people you accuse me of “making assumptions beyond basic presuppositions”, presumably based on “rationalistic Modernism”. Your justification for these statements is this: “Because God didn’t tell us, this assumption has no Biblical backing although it is a somewhat reasonable hypothesis (i.e. educated guess).” OK. But what about your presumption that the weight of choice by believing churches over 400 years equals God’s choice of one translation over all others? I see no Biblical backing for that either. Show me a verse that says anything like “Verily, ye will know the only right copies and the only right translations, because I will reveal it in the hearts of all of you over time.” No Scripture even indicates that there will ever be a single translation preferred by God. You have reasoned it out, to support your view.
You say “To be forced to depend on the support and approval of conservative scholarship, reduces Scripture to the lowest common denominator of human effort.”
I don’t believe that’s the process. The genius of God in preservation of His Word is seen in the fact that we have so many manuscripts to sift through.
Let’s say that you wanted to write something to be preserved for the ages. How would you guarantee it lasting throughout human history? God works through humans with His Word’s transmission, so there must be a lasting human process. Carved in stone? Stone wears. Carved in metal plates? They tarnish. Carved in precious metal plates? They would be stolen and melted for their intrinsic metal value. What does our Lord do? He creates a process by which thousands of copies are made (maybe millions; who knows how many were made that we never found). The only reason scholars are the ones leading the discussion is because the majority of Christians never learned Greek or Hebrew. If we all knew these languages, and were all extremely motivated, every one of us could be working through the issues together.
You probably have already noted that my statement about the juxtaposition of such passages as II Tim. 3:16-17 with verse 15 acknowledges your statement that “If inspiration is not retained by the Scriptures at hand, then their status is not any more than any other human book.” You are, of course, correct. I will not rehash the other posts on this thread that are trying to more tightly define Inspiration in response to your perfectly valid point. But you have not provided any passages that link Preservation and Inspiration in the way that you claim they are linked. While there are those who deny Preservation, I am not one of them. But this does not mean that I believe Preservation works as you describe it. In fact, Bob Hayton’s concurrent article on “Let the Minutiae Speak” and the thread following it call the kind of Preservation you posit into question (along with many other well thought out articles and papers).
OK. That’s enough for now. Looking forward to your reply.
Mike D
Why is it that my voice always seems to be loudest when I am saying the dumbest things?
[Greg Linscott]But then what happens when they publish something you don’t like or think is right? ;)Don’t support their conferences, don’t invite them to your meetings, don’t buy their books, don’t use their materials, don’t support them as missionaries, don’t promote their schools…It would seem, then, that would ultimately lead to a comprehensive series of meetings, an over-encompassing publishing house to produce books and materials, and a structure to commission or approve schools.
I wonder if anyone has ever tried that? :-)
"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells
[Jay C.][Greg Linscott]But then what happens when they publish something you don’t like or think is right? ;)Don’t support their conferences, don’t invite them to your meetings, don’t buy their books, don’t use their materials, don’t support them as missionaries, don’t promote their schools…It would seem, then, that would ultimately lead to a comprehensive series of meetings, an over-encompassing publishing house to produce books and materials, and a structure to commission or approve schools.
I wonder if anyone has ever tried that? :-)
Hoping to shed more light than heat..
That’s also why I thought Don’s comment (as a BJU alumnus) somewhat ironic. BJU has obviously found a niche where they can serve a wider range- perhaps not as wide as some have in mind, but certainly bridging a lot of issue people think are important at the church level. Where would BJUP be if everyone applied that philosophy- not to mention BJUP being selective with who they would sell to?
Greg Linscott
Marshall, MN
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